nnMriTiirCC «> fiHine »•! ordergis always a feature of our bugineBS. 

KlllVlrl lir^N Catalogues sent free. Any Play, Dialogue Book, Speaker, 

■ ■■■^'^' riiiiri^ Tirv/^L- Asr;<ro fin^ "Rf>nrHa.— in fnnt anvfhine Tou want 



tf - ^ n m m j_^ ^ GuMeB"o"ok7Wigs and Beards,— in fact anything you want 

I PS 635 AMES' PUBLISHING CO., Clyde, Ohio 

Ip^^^f^ AMES' SERIES OF ^ 

r .NDARD AND MINOR DRAMA, 



^ ^ 2 
5^ 



Co o 

-I' 2-^ 






5 ^ y 



No. 260. 



COUSIN JOHN'S 



ALBUM 



A PANTOMIME. 



PKICE 15 CENTS. 



CLYDE, OHIO: 
AMES' PUBLISHING CO, . 

^^ 5^ 



>il 

pi ® 1^ 
C8-0 2 

Eo o) g 

o • 

a> 
?i 



so » 

- hcj- 



- No goods sent C. 0. D. Payment MUST accompany all order 



^ ALPHABETICAL LIST DP ^ 

iiniBs' Edition of Plays. 

•*> 9^(1^ -4 

FIFTEEN CENTS EACH UNLESS OTHERWISE MARKED. 



NO. M. 9. 

DRAMAS. 

2 A Desperate Game 3 2 

164 After Ten Years 7 5 

39 A Life's Revenge 7 5 

43 Arrah de Baugh 7 5 

100 Aurora Floyd 7 2 

125 Auld Robin Gray 25c 13 8 

89 Beauty of Lyons 11 2 

113 Bill Dctriek 7 3 

226 Brae, the Poor House GirL... 4 4 
14 Brigands of Calabria 6 1 

160 Conn; or, Love's Victory 11 3 

161 Dora 5 2 

60 Driven to the Wall 10 3 

152 Driven from Home 7 4 

173 EastLynne 8 7 

143 Emigrant's Daughter 8 3 

176 Factory Girl 6 3 

162 Fielding Manor 9 6 

117 Hal Hazard, 25c 10 3 

2U7 Heroic Dutchman of 76 8 3 

52 Henrv Grandcn 11 8 

76 How He Did It 3 2 

141 Hidden Treasures 4 2 

26 Hunter of the Alps 9 4 

191 Hidden Hand 15 7 

ly4 Lights and Shadows of the 

Great Kebellum, 25c 10 5 

3 Lady of Lyons 12 5 

9 Lady Audley's Secret 6 4 

46 Man and Wife 12 7 

227 Maud's Peril 5 3 

211 Midnight Mistake .'. 6 2 

103 Miriam's Crime 5 2 

91 Michael Erie 8 3 

36 Miller of Derwent Water 5 2 

34 Mistletoe Bough 7 3 

229 Mountebanks (The) 6 2 

2-SA Old Honesty 5 2 

81 Old Phil's Birthday 5 3 

85 Outcast's Wife; 12 3 

s:i Out on the World 5 4 

196 Oath Bound 6 2 

29 Painter of Ghent 5 3 

IS Poacher's Doom 8 3 

10 Reverses ]i 6 

45 Rock Allen 5 3 

79 Spy of Atlanta, 25c U 3 

144 Thokla 9 4 

(i7 The False Friend 6 1 

'17 The Fatal lilow 7 1 

119 The Forty-Niners lU 4 

'.i2 'Ihe <Unil<'man in Black 9 4 

112 The New Magdalen 8 3 

71 Tho Reward of Crime 5 3 

105 Through Snow and Sunshine 6 4 

7 The Vow of the Ornani 7 1 

201 Ticket of Leave Man 9 3 

193 Toodles 7 2 

200 Uncle Tom's Cabin 15 7 

121 Will-o'-the-Wisp, 9 4 

Jh 



NO. M. F. 

41 Won at Last 7 3 

192 Zion 7 4 

TEMPERANCE PLAYS. 

73 At Last 7 1 

75 Adrift 5 4 

187 Aunt Dinah's Pledge 6 3 

202 Drunkard [The] 13 5 

185 Drunkar :'s Warning....* 6 3 

189 Drunkard's Doom 15 5 

181 Fifteen Years of a Drunk- 
ard's Life 13 4 

183 Fruits of the Wine Cup 6 3 

104 Lost 6 2 

146 Our Awful Aunt 4 4 

53 Out in the Streets 6 4 

51 Rescued 5 3 

59 Saved 2 3 

102 Turn of the Tide 7 4 

63 Three^ Glasses a Day 4 2 

62 Ten Nights in a Bar-Room... 7 3 



Wrecked. 

COMEDIES. 



...9 3 



168 A Pleasure Trip 7 3 

136 A Legal Holiday 5 3 

124 An Afflicted Family 7 5 

178 Caste 5 3 

199 Home 4 3 

174 Love's Labor Not Lost 3 3 

149 New Years in N. Y 7 6 

37 Not So Bad After All 6 5 

237 Not Such a Fool as He Looks 6 3 

126 Our Daughters 8 6 

114 Passions 8 4 

219 Rags and Bottles 4 1 

221 Solon Shingle 14 2 

87 The Biter Bit 3 2 

TRAGEDIES. 

16 The Serf 6 3 

FARCES AND COMEDIETTAS. 

129 Aar-u-ag-oos 2 1 

132 Actor and Servant 1 1 

12 A Capital Match 3 2 

166 A Texan Mother-in-Law 4 6 

30 A Day Well Spent 7 5 

109 ARcguhirFix 2 4 

80 Alarmingly Suspicious 4 3 

78 An Awful Criminal 3 3 

65 An Unwelcome Return 3 1 

31 A Pet of the Public 4 2 

21 A I'lomaiitic Attachment 3 3 

123 A ThriHing Item 3 I 

'^0 A Ticket of Leave '6 2 

175 Betsey Baker 2 2 

8 Better Half 5 2 

86 Black vs. White 4 2 



Captain Smith. 



V iiptitlll ^Ulllll o 

84 Cheek Anil Win 3 

225 Cupi 's Capers 4 

49 Der Two Surprises 1 



3 3 




xfi 



Cousin John's Album, 



A PANTOMIME, 



By Ida M. Buxtnn, 



Atdhor of ''Our Aivful Aunt;' ''On to Victory;' "Tit for 
Tat;' "How He Popped the Question;' "Taking 
the Census;' "Matrimonial Bliss;' "How She 
Has Her Own Way;' "The Sewing 
Circle of the Period;' "Why 
They Joined the Re- 
becca's;' etc. 



Entered according to act of Congrcfts in the year 1888, by 

AMES' PUBLISHING CO. 

in the office of the Librarian of Congress at ^Ya8hington. 




CLYDE, OHIO: 

AMES' PUBLISHING CO, 



\ 



COUSIN JOHN'S ALBUM. 



CHARACTERS. .Z^IB^ 



Ien Ladies. Ten Gentlemen. 



Portrait 1 First Sweetheart. Portrait 2 Sam Thomas. 



3 Lady Missionary. 

5 Samantha Jane. 

7 Flirt. 

9 Undertaker. 
11 Schoolmarm. 
13 Senator AVindbag. 
15 Group of 4 young 



4 Acrobat. 

6 Second Love. 

8 Doctor. 
10 His Wife. 
12 Lady Lecturer. 
14 Group of 4 girls 
16 Words "Good 



men. Night." 

COSTUMES. 

Keader. — Black suit, powdered hair and whiskers. 
Others wear costumes appropriate for forty years ago. 

Time of Performance — 20 minutes. 

STA GE DIRECTIONS. 

In the curtain cut two oval holes large enough to show 
the head and waist of portraits ; over these holes put two 
pieces of paper, pasted at tlie sides so they can be opened 
and closed like the opposite leaves of a book. On one of 
these leaves or covers, print date of present year, on the 
other that of forty years previous. The actors are all 
back of curtain ; only one leaf is opened at a time and 
while that portrait is being shown the next takes position; 
as quick as verse describing picture is read, close that 
leaf, giving time for the next picture on that side to pose; 
variety in posture is necessary and gives opportunity for 
display of artistic taste ; profiles, upward glances, down- 
ward caste of head, all these postures must be studied to 
produce the desired effect. 

No. 16 is not shown until the Reader closes the last 
verse, then as he bows he opens the leaf and shows the 
words "good night," which have been printed in black on 
cardboard. 

Eeader stands in front of curtain and may read or re- 
cite the description, the latter is preferable. 



TMP92-008773 



Cousin John's Album. 

Beade7\ 

Most people have a fancy for albums, 

For faces familiar or strange, 
So I'll show you the poi*traits I prize most, 

Though all have seen many a change. 
Pictures of friends, schoolmates and sweethearts, 

You think they're not much of a show? 
Perhaps not, but I thought them the finest 

They were new forty odd years ago. 
{opens leaf) 

Here's one! Well, that's my first sweetheart! 

I loved her devotedly once; 
I sighed and wooed like an old time knight, 

'Tis true! I was just such a dunce. 
But I got my eyes opened; I tell you, 

I found she was dreadfully cross. 
So when she jilted me for Sam Thomas, 

I thought it no very great loss. 

{opens leaf) 

And here's Sam himself ! Ah, you poor fellow! 

He's seen pretty tough times, I guess; 
Been ship- wrecked, failed twice and is hen-pecked, 

The last is the worst, he'll confess! 
That thick, glossy hair has now vanished, 

He's bald as a pumpkin, they say; 
With wrinkles all over the once smooth cheeks; 

Yes, yes, Sam's getting old and gray! 



4 COUSIN- rOHN . ALBUM. 

{opens leaf) 

Look! There's a face for an artist to paint! 

Such eyebrows and such a fine nose, 
Cheeks round and soft as a lily fair, 

She's living yet, I suppose. 
The last I heard she was in far off lands, 

On a mission to heathens bent, 
A pious, self-sacrificing young girl. 

Her life to a good cause was lent. 

(ope7is leaf) 

And this was a merry, jolly young lad. 

So full of his fun and gay mirth. 
In all kinds of mischief and yet wasn't bad, 

Good hearted as any on earth. 
Went with a circus a couple of years, 

An acrobat, good, I was told; 
Limp as a rag, swift as a dart. 

He saved up a heap of good gold. 

[opens leaf) 

Here is she that was Samantha Jane Brown, 

Old Brown's eldest daughter, you know; 
She was once the great belle of Mapleville town 

But that's forty odd years ago. 
Was spoony myself in that quarter, once. 

But quickly relinquished the dream 
At the end of the first summer season, 

For oh, how she ate the ice cream! 
A very fine looking woman, 'tis true! 

Among the best you may rank her. 
Her home is now on Canadian soil. 

Husband, you know, was a banker! 



[opens leaf) 



And this little face with it's charming smile, I 

A beauty was she, I declare! I 

Such lips as those you don't see every day, ] 

Nor such beautiful curly hair. \ 

She loved me truly, I know that she did; 

"It might have been!" Ah, who can tell? \ 

Fate sent us apart, as fate sometimes does ^ - 



COUSIN JOHN S ALBUM. ,5 

Who knows whether wisely and well! 
Ah, me! I've searched the world over for her, 

From the mountain peak to the shore; 
If I find her and she's unmarried still, 

A bachelor I'll be no more. ' 



(opens leaf) 



I said 'twas fate, but no! 'twas this girl; 

That quarrel — she made it — I know! 
A flirt she was, ever ready to plague, 

And I wasn't wise years ago. 
So she pulled the wool quite over my eyes, 

Pretending to be such a saint — — 
But she wore false hair and had a glass eye, 

And loaded her face full of paint. 

(opens leaf) 

This fellow is grave enough for a judge. 

Looks some like a parson, you see! 
But long years ago his shingle swung out 

With the golden letters, M. D. 
His plasters and pills are famous, I hear; 

They reap him a harvest of gold; 
But he spends it all as quick as it comes. 

In betting on horses, I'm told! 

(opens leaf) 

Here is his brother and partner as well. 

Another M. D.? Not at all! 
An undertaker, embalmer is he ; 

I saw him, poor fellow, last fall. 



(opens leaf) 



That was his wife, but now they're divorced! 

The silliest couple I know! 
Quarrelled over trifles, refused to relent, 

And now live in sadness and woe. 



(oj)ens leaf) 



A schoolmarm, this, you can tell by the lips, 
The face is determined but true , 

Her trusty rattan she holds in one hand, 
In the other a text book or two. 



6 COUSIN JOHNS ALBUM. 

She was once engaged to an English lord 

But gave him the mitten one day, 
iFor it pained her ears and shocked her nerves 
That "h" he never could say. 

(opens leaf) 

A famous woman — you have heard of her, 

A speaker of national note; 
Our country's evils and everyone's needs 

And duty, she knows it by rote. 

{opens leaf) 

Senator Windbag, I now introduce, 

State senator for the year; 
Too much mouth has he for one of his tribe, 

And scarcely quite enough ear. 
He lords it about with important airs, 

Thinks we are all blind as bats; 
He's at State House now, defending the bill 

To protect all the Maltese cats. 

{opens leaf) 

A group of beauties, these four merry girls, 

They certainly posed very well. 
The brightest maids, with the prettiest bangs 

Floss, Genevieve, Kitty and Nell. 
A club they organized one summer day, 

And signed a strict pledge not to ride, 
Walk, talk, flirt or chat with any young man, 

Who, pledge 'gainst tobacco defied. 
{opG7is leaf) 

A commotion was there, laughable, too! 

These young men would not be outdone, 
So they quickly formed another queer club. 

A pledge they signed too, just for fun. 
They promised each other not to invite, 

'Neath penalty of being hanged. 
For walk, talk, rides or other escort, 

A naaiden who wore here hair banged. 
The girls were thus left quite out in the cold. 

As the young men had been before, 
They pouted awhile, vowed never to speak. 

And the pledges were heard of no more. 



COUSIN JOHN S ALBUM. 

(opens leaf) 

These pictures all very highly I prize, 

My boyhood history they tell, 
Of fond hopes unfulfiled, of lover's fears, 

And of strong old friendships as well. 
Forty odd years! It seems but a day 

Since this album was fresh and new. 
But it's worn with time and dimmed by dust, 

And it's owner is wearing out, too! 

CUKTAIN. 



IT WILL DBAW AS WELL AS UNCLE TOM'S CABIN— A 
DBAMA OF THE SOUTH. JUST PUBLISHED. 



MILLIE,THE QUADROON; 

— ^.o=^ OR, -^.o.— 

OUT OF BONDAGE. 



A DBAMA IN FIVE ACTS, BY LIZZIE MAY ELWYN, 
AUTHOB OF DOT; THE MINEB'S DAUGHTEB. 

ORDER A COPY-ONLY 15 CENTS. 

ACT I— Scene 1st.— Home of Fred Grover— Priscilla, Fred's 
old maid sister — Fred's return from the Soutli — His present to Pris- 
cilla, of Gyp, a "little nigger"— Gyp dances— Millie's horror of 
slavery— Gyp's happiness— Song and dance. 

ACT II. — Scene 1st. — News of cousin Charlie, an old lover of 
Millie's— Gyp and Siah's soda water, an amusing scene— Priscilla, 
her horror of being kissed by "a man" — Millie vindicates herself by 
revealing the secret of her life to Charlie, which is heard by Daville 
—Gyp— Meeting of Millie and Daville— Daville reveals Millie's se- 
cret to Isadore, his betrothed — Comic scene between Gyp and Siah. 

ACT III. — Scene 1st. — Ji^vil designs of Daville and Isadore— 
Millie, the child of old Harriet, the slave — Meeting of Isadore and 
Harriet, her threat, "You are my child" — Isadore attempts ber mur- 
der by pushing her over the clift"; slie is rescued by Daville— Isadore 
reveals her love for Fred, which Millie and Charlie overhear — Millie's 
anguish and final blow — "No wife, aslave!"— Quarrel of Daville and 
Charlie— Isadore's search for the body of old Harriet. Scene 2d. — 
Escape of Charlie — A piece of Priscilla's; mind — Her promise to 
Millie— Oath of Isadore— Millie's flight. Scene 3d.— Daville gives an 
account of the shooting and supposed flight of Millie with Charlie- 
Priscilla on her mettle— Supposed suicide of MilUie— A LAPSE OF 
SEVEN YEARS. 

ACT IV.— Scene 1st.— Daville accuses Isadore, now Mrs. Grover, 
of Harriet's murder— Millie, as Sister Agnes, the French governess — 
Return of Charlie— Fred's anger and Priscilla's interference. Scene 
2d. — Charlie disguised as old Nathan— Millie's letter found which 
explains her flight — Fred's remorse — Daville and Isadore recognize 
Millie— Their plot against her discovered by old JSathan. 

ACT v.— Scene 1st.— Southern Plantation— Priscilla discovers 
Sister Agnes, as Millie — Her anger at being kissed by a nigger — 
Daville threatens Isadore with slavery— Attempted murder of Pris- 
cilla— Scene between Gyp and Siah. Scene 2d.— Millie a slave— 
Daville ofl"ers her marriage— Millie tied to the whipping post— Her 
rescue by Gyp. Scene 3d.— Millie and Gyp in the swamp— At- 
tempted capture— Rescued by Charlie— Old Harriet clears the mys- 
tery of Millie and Isadore's birth— "There is but one way left, 
death*'— Arrest of Daville— Death of Charlie— Reconciliation of Fred 
and Millie, who is freed from bondage. 



iimEs' Plays — CantinuEd. 



FARCES CONTINUED. 

72 Deuce is in Him 5 1 

19 Did I Dream it 4 3 

42 Domeatic Felicity 1 1 

188 Dutch Prize Fighter 3 

220 Diitchy vs. Nigger 3 

148 Eh? What Did You Say 3 1 

218 Everybody Astonished 4 

224 Fooling with the Wrong Man 2 1 

233 Freezng a Moth#r-in-Law... 2 1 

154 Fun in a Post Office 4 2 

184 Family Discipline 1 

209 Goose with the Golden Eggs.. 5 3 

13 Give Me Mv Wife 3 3 

66 Hans, the Dutch J. P 3 1 

116 Hash 4 2 

120 H. M. S. Plum 1 1 

103 How Sister Paxey got her 

Child Baptiz' d 2 1 

50 How She has Own Way 1 3 

140 How He Popped the Quest'n. 1 1 

74 How to Tame M-in-Law 4 2 

35 How Stout i'our Getting 5 2 

47 In the Wrong Box 3 

95 In the Wrong Clothes 5 3 

11 John Smith 5 3 

99 Jumbo Jum 4 3 

82 Killing Time 1 1 

182 Kittled Wedding Cake : 1 3 

127 Lick Skillet Wedding 2 2 

228 L'luderbach's Little Surprise 3 

106 Lodgings for Two 3 

139 Matrimonial Bliss 1 1 

231 Matcii lor a Mother-in-Law.. 2 2 
235 More Blunders than one 4 3 

69 Mother's Fool 6 1 

1 Mr. and Mrs. Pringle 7 4 

158 Mr. Hudson's Tiger Hunt 1 1 

23 My Heart's in Highlands 4 3 

208 A y Precious Betsey 4 4 

212 My Turn Next 4 3 

32 M Wife's Relations 4 4 

1S6 My Day and Now-a-Days 1 

4i Obedience 1 2 

33 On the SIv 3 2 

57 Paddy Miles' Boy 5 2 

217 Paten' Washing Machine 4 1 

165 Persecuted Dutchman 6 3 

H)o Poor Pilicody 2 3 

159 Quiet Family 4 4 

171 Rough Diamond 4 3 

180 Ripples y.: 2 

48 Schi.aps 1 1 

138 Sewing Circle of P. riod.... 5 

115 S. H. A. M. Pinafore 3 3 

55 Souiebody's Nobody 3 2 

232 Sfage Struck Yankee 4 2 

137 Taking the Census 1 1 

40 Thit Mysterious B'die 2 2 

;i8 T e Bewitched Closet 5 2 

131 The Cigarette 4 2 

101 The Coming Man 3 1 

167 Turn Him Out 3 2 

68 The Sham Professor 4 

54 TheTwoT.J's 4 2 



142 
213 
151 
5 
56 
70 
135 
147 
155 

111 

157 



204 

15 
172 

98 
222 
214 
145 
190 

27 
230 
153 

24 
23'i 

77 

88 
128 

90 

6i 

1.5Q 
10^ 
131 
177 
96 
107 
133 
179 
94 
25 
92 
10 
64 
122 

lis 

6 
108 

4 
197 
198 
170 
216 
206 
210 
203 
205 
156 

17 
130 



Thirty-three Next Birthday.. 

Tit for Tat 

Vermont Wool Dealer 

Wanted a Husband 

When Women Weep 

Wooing Under Difficulties 

Which will he Marry 

Widower's Trials „«. 

Waking Him Up 

Why they Joined the Re- 
beccas 

Yankee Duelist 

Yankee Peddler 

ETHIOPIAN FARCES. 

Academy of Stars 

An Unhappy Pair „ 

Black Shoemaker 

Black Statue 

Colored Senators 

Chops „ 

Cuff's Luck ^ 

Crimps Trip 

Fetter Lane to Gravesend 

Hamlet the Dainty 

Haunted House 

Handy Andy „..„, 

Hypochondriac The 

Joe's Vis t „ 

Mischievous Nigger 

Musioi'j Darkey 

No Cur*:' lo Pay 

Not as Deaf as He Seems...," 

Old Dad's Cabin 

OldPompey 

Other People's Children 

Pomp's Pranks 

Quarrebome Servants 

Rooms to Let „^ 

School „ ^ 

Seeing Hosting 

Sham Doctor 

16,000 Years Ago 

Sport with a Sportsman 

Stage Struck Darkey ...». 

Stocks Up, Stocks Down 

Tliat Boy Sara 

The Select School 

The Popcorn Man ...„....., 

The Studio „ „, 

Those Awful Boys 

Twain's Dodging 

Tricks 

Uncle Jelf 

U. S. Mail 

Vice Versa 

Villkens and Dinah ^ 

Virginia .Muii my 

Who Stole th« Chickens 

William Tell 

Wig-Maker and Hid Servants 
GUIDE BOOKS. 

Hints on Elocution ^ 

Hints to Amateurs .^ 



CANTATA. 215 On to Victory (with chorus) 2^ cents 4 6 



sB 




RecGntly IssueiIT 

250> Festival of Days. A series of Tableaux, by Ida ]M. Buxton, repre- 
senting the memorial days of the year. Just the thing for an evening's entertain- 
ment, as it is easily produced, requiring no scenery. Time of performance, one hour. 

251* Millie) tlie Qiladroou; or, Out of Bondage. A drama in 5 
acts, by Lizzie M, Elvvyn. (i males, 5 females; the greatest success of the se ison. 
This drama is replete with fine situations and unlooked for developoiaents. Mirth 
and sadness are well combined— something after the style of "Uncle Tom's Cabin," 
representing scenes in the South before slavery was abolished. Costumes modern. 
Time of production, 2 hours. 

252. That A-wrful Carpet-Bag. An original farce, in 3 scenes, by Ad 
H. Gibson. y> males, 3 females. Scene in a hotel; a widow and old maid, whose 
curiosity gets them into embaressing situations. Irish character immense. Time 
30 minutes. 

253. The Best Cure. An ethiopian farce in 1 act, by C. F. Ingraham. 4 
male, 1 female— exceedingly tunny farce. A darkey who was cured of imaginary ill- 
ness—the "cure" will be appreciated by all lovers of fun. Time, 30 minutes. 

254. Dot, the Miner^s Daughter; or, One Glass of Wine. A 

teuiperance drama, in 3 acts, by Lizzie M. Elwjn, author of '"Millie, the Quadroon.'' 
9 males, 5 females. This is the most- popular temperance play written since "Turn 
of the Tide" was published. Characters all eciually good; two n.gro characters. 
Ebony and Hapzibati, which are immense, and keeps an audience in a continuous ui>- 
roar. Costumes, modern. Time, 2 hours. 

255. Gertie's Vindication. A domestic drama, in 2 acts, by G H. Pierce. 
3 males, 3 females. A thoroughly good moral play, showing the truth of the old say- 
ing, "Honesty is the best policy." JacK, the negro, and Katy, the Irish girl, are 
both exceedingly, good and will keep aw audience convulsed with laughter. Cos- 
tumes, modern. Time, one and one-half hours. 

256. Midnight Colic. A sketch in one scene, by D. E. AUyn. 2 males, 
1 female. A most laughable sketch that will please every one. Time of production, 
thirty minutes. 

257. Caught in the Act. Comedy in 3 acts, by Newton Chisnell. 7 
m:iles, 3 females. This comedy is a favorite in the profession, and will take well 
Avithamatneis— is full of fun, dialogue is si)arkling— not a dull speech from begin- 
ning to end. Time of production is about 2 hours. 

MILLIE; THE^QUADROON. a 

new Drama, just published from the author's 
original manuscript, it is immense, and will 
give the best of satisfaction to an audience. 
The scene is laid in the south before slavery 
was abolished. The play is very much after 
the style of Uncle Tom's Cabin. Send for 
a copy. Only 15 cents. 

MIDNIGHT~COLTc. a Laughable 

Sketch in one scene. This Sketch with Millie; 
the Quadroon, will make an evening's enter- 
tainment that will please any audience. 15c. 



